Birmingham, Alabama

Everything Birmingham is known for

95 songs mention this city 279 artists from here

Birmingham, Alabama, known as the Magic City, has a rich musical identity that resonates throughout the Deep South. The city has been home to 279 artists across various genres and is mentioned in 95 songs. From the metal sounds of ERRA to the country stylings of Emmylou Harris, Birmingham's artists have made their mark. The city's musical connections are also evident in songs like Dolly Parton's "Boulder to Birmingham" and Joan Baez's "Birmingham Sunday." Birmingham also has a significant jazz tradition, with historical areas like Tuxedo Junction playing a role in its evolution.

Music in Birmingham

Songs About Birmingham

Birmingham
Love Rat
83%
Birmingham Jail (feat. Vince Gill)
Barry Abernathy
83%
Birmingham
Justin Jeansonne
83%
Birmingham Tonight
Delbert McClinton
82%
"If I could be in Birmingham tonight"
Boulder to Birmingham
Dolly Parton
82%
"I would walk all the way from Boulder to Birmingham"
Birmingham Bounce (feat. Red Foley)
Grady Martin
82%
Birmingham
Drive-By Truckers
81%
"Birmingham"
Paint Me a Birmingham
Tracy Lawrence
81%
"Could you paint me a Birmingham?"
Birmingham Sunday
Joan Baez
81%
"On Birmingham Sunday the blood ran like wine"
Birmingham Break Down (Live at the Big T Roadhouse)
Dale Watson
81%
Breakfast in Birmingham
Tanya Tucker
81%
"Breakfast in Birmingham"
Birmingham
Tommy Collins
81%
Back to Birmingham
Trey Lewis
80%
"Back in Birmingham"
Train to Birmingham (live)
Cross Canadian Ragweed
79%
"On the train to Birmingham"
Walking Back to Birmingham
Leon Ashley
79%
Boulder to Birmingham
Emmylou Harris
79%
"I would walk all the way from Boulder to Birmingham"
Birmingham
Shovels & Rope
79%
"Five hundred miles from Birmingham"
Birmingham
Zach Bryan
78%
"I killed a man in Birmingham"
Outside Birmingham
Josh Slone
78%

Showing top 20 of 95 songs

Rivers & Roads in Song near Birmingham

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Birmingham.

History of Birmingham

The Iron Man on Red Mountain RoadyGoat

A 56-foot iron god stands watch over Birmingham, and he's the city in a nutshell. Vulcan, the Roman god of the forge, is the largest cast-iron statue in the world, perched atop Red Mountain on the very ore ridge that made the city. Birmingham was founded in 1871 at a rare crossing where coal, limestone, and iron ore all sat close together, the three ingredients for making steel, and it boomed so fast on iron and steel that it earned the nickname the 'Pittsburgh of the South.' Sculptor Giuseppe Moretti designed Vulcan for the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis to advertise Alabama's iron, and the statue was cast right here from local ore. Bolted together from 29 cast-iron pieces, the old god still raises his spear point over the valley. Birmingham literally forged its own guardian out of the ground it stands on.

Homewood, AL RoadyGoat

Homewood, Alabama, a suburb just south of Birmingham, has a history that stretches back to the early 20th century. While not a hotbed of celebrity culture, its quiet, residential streets have nurtured talent that has rippled outwards.

3.4 mi away

Steel in Twenty Minutes RoadyGoat

1856

Here's the trick the whole town is named for. Molten iron straight from the furnace, called pig iron, has too much carbon in it, which makes it brittle. The old way to fix that took at least a full day of heating, stirring, and reheating. Then Henry Bessemer realized you could blast cold air straight up through the liquid metal. The oxygen in that air violently burns off the excess carbon and impurities in a roaring shower of sparks. Counterintuitively, cold air makes it hotter, because the burning carbon releases huge heat on its own, no extra fuel needed. The result: a batch that once took a day was done in ten to twenty minutes. The price of steel collapsed, and the modern world of rails, bridges, and skyscrapers became possible.

11.8 mi away

16th Street Baptist Church

1963

On September 15, 1963, Klan members bombed this church during Sunday school, killing four young girls and shocking the nation.

Sloss Furnaces National Historic Landmark

1882

Pig iron blast furnaces that operated for nearly ninety years, now preserved as the only furnaces of their kind open to the public in the world.

Everything Near Birmingham

25 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Birmingham on the Map